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Must The States Discriminate Against Their Own Producers Under The Dormant Commerce Clause?, David M. Driesen
Must The States Discriminate Against Their Own Producers Under The Dormant Commerce Clause?, David M. Driesen
David M Driesen
This article works out the implications of an insight mentioned, but not developed thoroughly, in the literature on free trade law: A polity that regulates its own producers without regulating outside producers serving that polity discriminates against its own producers. This gives rise to a question, should laws serving free trade values require polities to discriminate against their own producers? The dormant Commerce Clause’s extraterritoriality doctrine—which prohibits regulating wholly outside the enacting state’s borders—seems to require discrimination against the enacting state’s producers. Federal courts have recently used this doctrine to strike down state laws addressing climate disruption and regulating the …